Printed fromChabadUCLA.com
ב"ה

Eikev 5766 - August 11, 2006

Living
There Now

For hundreds of years—perhaps since the beginning of creation—a piece of the world has been waiting for your soul to purify and repair it. And you are there . . . now.
Parshah
Eikev in a Nutshell
Moses describes Israel as a land flowing with milk and honey, describes the seven kinds of produce with which the land is blessed, and warns the nation about becoming haughty in the Promised Land.
Story
Rocks and Diamonds

“Oh, you little boy,” said the man, resting his free hand on the little boy’s shoulder, “you don’t know what it’s like to have to schlep rocks. When you’ll be big like me, you’ll be happy with a little oven too.”
Summer in Israel

"Our trip must go on," our tour guide Na'ama reminded us. "Like all Israelis, we'll continue to lead normal lives, in abnormal circumstances"
Seven Fruits of the Soul

Why are we never content to simply be? Why does our animal self posses willpower, passion and energy beyond anything our spiritual self could ever muster? What purpose does "happiness" serve? Which is greater--awareness or action? struggle or tranquility?
Spilling the Truth

Only what is in the mind and heart can come out through the mouth. The mouth is a vessel, a bridge, not a source.
The 15th of Av: Love and Rebirth
Our sages proclaimed the 15th of Av as one of the happiest days of the year, when Jewish maidens would go out to dance, hoping to attract fitting suitors.
We Whined a Lot!

The Parshah report gets an exclusive interview with one of the original Jews who left Egypt and wandered through the desert
No matter how hard a person works, no matter how much time or ingenuity he invests in his career or business, he will not earn a single cent more than what has been ordained for him from Above. Everything we do is merely the fashioning of the channel through which the divine blessing would flow and the vessels in which to receive them.
— The Chassidic Masters
Print Magazine

True peace is not a forced truce, not a homogenization of differences, not a common ground that abandons our home territories.

True peace is the oneness that sprouts from diversity, the beauty that emerges from a panorama of colors, strokes and textures, from the harmony of many instruments each playing a unique part, n...

New on ChabadUCLA.com